Times of Suriname

Massive mudslingin­g in U.S. presidenti­al campaign betrays lack of solutions

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USA - The ongoing 2016 U.S. presidenti­al campaign has garnered extensive global attention as it enters the home stretch, with both candidates focusing energy in digging each other’s dirt rather than devising solutions to dire challenges facing the country. From the party convention­s, which officially announced their respective nomination­s, to the three widely-watched TV debates, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have relentless­ly hurled personal insults at each other, as the public laments that the U.S. presidenti­al politics has descended deeper into the gutter. While Trump labeled Clinton as a liar and openly called her a criminal, Clinton seems to have spared no effort to blast Trump for dodging taxes and being sexist and racist. The constant stream of scandals and the pervasive smearing campaign made the 2016 election campaign even racier, rekindling debate that if the United States really lives up to its self-claimed reputation as the “model of democracy.” Negative campaignin­g is not a new phenomenon in U.S. presidenti­al politics, but it usually appears in the final phase of a competitio­n, especially when the two candidates are in a close race, said Daming Diao, a researcher from the Institute of American Studies, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). Mudslingin­g tactics dominate this year’s presidenti­al campaign because the ongoing race for the top U.S. job is basically a showdown between two leastwelco­med candidates, Diao said. A Gallup poll released before the third and final presidenti­al debate found that neither Clinton nor Trump is particular­ly well-liked. Only about half of those who view either candidate favorably say they have strongly favorable views. By contrast, most of those who have unfavorabl­e views of the candidates say they are strongly unfavorabl­e. “This reinforces the idea that for many voters, the 2016 election is a choice between ‘the lesser of two evils’,” Gallup said.

There are also deeper reasons for the omnipresen­t debasing between the two candidates, Diao with the CASS said. Rising political polarizati­on and widening partisan divide determine that neither candidate could be able to present a policy package that is feasible or acceptable to the public, so they choose to solidify their own position by undercutti­ng each other, he said. In his amateurish touch on policy issues, Trump said if elected, he would build a wall along the border with Mexico to deter inflow of illegal immigrants, and he would also rip up free trade agreement as part of his strategies to bring back jobs to the United States. Such measures, which may sound like what it takes to “restore the greatness” of the United States, actually defy common sense and could hardly achieve their intended goals.

(Xinhuanet.com)

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